St. 做厙輦⑹ at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR)
For the second consecutive year, St. 做厙輦⑹'s acceptance rate for the National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) reached 100 percent. Fifteen students from nine disciplines will deliver 11 oral presentations at the conference in April at the University of North Carolina Asheville.
St. Kates Collaborative Undergraduate Research Program started sending student-researchers to NCUR in 2011, and has consistently exceeded the conferences average acceptance rate (ranging from 8090 percent in a given year).
NCUR teams from St. Kates also participated as Summer Scholars 2015, an initiative of St. Kates Collaborative Undergraduate Research Program. One key expectation of the Summer Scholars participants is to present their research at a national conference.
This is a difficult challenge. Juggling faculty and student academic schedules and preparing work for public dissemination is a high-demand endeavor, says Lynda Szymanski, director of the Collaborative Undergraduate Research Program. The fact that all of our Summer Scholar teams are presenting at NCUR or another prestigious national conference is a testament to the commitment of the faculty-student teams, the rigor of their work, and the support this program offers our participants.
In addition to NCUR, six student and five chemistry faculty members are presenting research in March at the American Chemical Societys National Meeting and Exposition in San Diego. Communications Studies major Bri Byram 17 and Assistant Professor Rafael Cervantes are scheduled to present their Summer Scholars work at the Western States Communication Association Conference on February 28 in San Diego. Associate Professor Colleen Carpenter presented her work with Jane Wolfgram '16 at the American Academy of Religion and Society of Biblical Literature in Atlanta this past November.
Rachel Greeninger '18 and Associate Professor Anupama Pasricha explored the use of technology and 3D printing in sustainable fashion design. The team is presenting their research at NCUR 2016. Photos by Alex Kennedy '15.
St. Kates 2016 NCUR teams
- Apparel Design
- Technology and Sustainable Fashion: 3D Printing Revolution
Rachel Greeninger 18, with Associate Professor Anupama Pasricha
- Technology and Sustainable Fashion: 3D Printing Revolution
- Biology
- Identification and Cloning of Ammonium Transporter Genes from the Green Algae, C. Scutata, Closely Related to Early Land Plants
Madison Olimb 16, with Assistant Professor Tami McDonald - Cloning and Amplification of Ammonium Transporter Genes in Chlorokybus Atmophyticus, a Streptophyte Green Algae
Shelby Ward 16, with Assistant Professor Tami McDonald
- Identification and Cloning of Ammonium Transporter Genes from the Green Algae, C. Scutata, Closely Related to Early Land Plants
- Chemistry
- Isolation and Identification of Secondary Metabolites in Fusarium sp. S7-4, DNA 38-P
Sophia Hani 16, with Assistant Professor Ani Jordan - Graphene Oxide: A Controlled Reduction Using Ascorbic Acid
Denyce Alvarez 16 and Alexa Trusty 18 (pictured top), with Professor Gina Mancini-Samuelson
- Isolation and Identification of Secondary Metabolites in Fusarium sp. S7-4, DNA 38-P
- Dietetics/Nutrition Science
- Assessment of Prevalence, Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors of Food Insecurity in Students Attending Private Colleges
Kayla Guerrero 16, with Assistant Professor Teri Burgess-Champoux
- Assessment of Prevalence, Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors of Food Insecurity in Students Attending Private Colleges
- Economics
- Free to Work? The Impact of State Mandated Free Full-Day Kindergarten on Maternal Labor Force
Ashley Erceg 16 and Katie Tholke 16, with Assistant Professor Kristine West
- Free to Work? The Impact of State Mandated Free Full-Day Kindergarten on Maternal Labor Force
- Exercise and Sports Science
- Resistance Training for Older Adults: More than Just Strength?
Donielle Kurvers 16 and Sarah Olsen 16, with Assistant Professor Joshua Guggenheimer
- Resistance Training for Older Adults: More than Just Strength?
- History
- Unwed Mothers in Midcentury America: A Shameful Double Standard
Amanda Campbell 17, with Visiting Assistant Professor Kim Heikkila
- Unwed Mothers in Midcentury America: A Shameful Double Standard
- Mathematics
- Cleaning Threshold Graphs
Rose Winter 17, with Assistant Professor Chris Ross
- Cleaning Threshold Graphs
- Psychology
- Predictors of College Student Work/Life/School Balance
Lee Danielsen 15 and Kelly Kroening 15, with Professor Andrea Olson
- Predictors of College Student Work/Life/School Balance
By Sharon Rolenc